close

Samantha Bee aims to cause a buzz on ‘Full Frontal’

4 min read
article image -

LOS ANGELES – After a day of dutifully answering reporters’ questions about her new TBS show, “Full Frontal,” Samantha Bee confessed to an urgent desire.

“I want a ponytail so badly. I want my hair out of my face. I want my jeans on and flat shoes,” said Bee, glammed up at the moment in a body-hugging dress and challenging heels.

She’s out of luck. The cheekily titled “Full Frontal,” a weekly slice of satire that premiered Monday, will keep the former “Daily Show” correspondent relentlessly on-camera and well-groomed.

In the early going, Bee is flying solo as the host and only field reporter, applying the expertise acquired in a decade-plus on Jon Stewart’s show to issues and events that she’s passionate about. One possibility: a look at medical service accorded female veterans.

Other correspondents and guests eventually will join her, said Bee, who’s an executive producer for the show, along with Jason Jones, her husband and former “Daily Show” colleague. But for now, the talented comedian and writer will play Queen Bee – a welcome change from most of TV, where guys dominate talk and comedy shows.

New episdoes of “Full Frontal” will premiere at 10:30 p.m Mondays.

“The (show’s) roots are firmly planted in ‘The Daily Show,’ but we’re definitely trying to grow from that experience. We’re trying to push forward,” Bee said. “But Jo (Miller, an executive producer) is from there. We worked together for years. The man running the field (reports) department is a close friend, Miles Kahn, who worked for a decade at ‘The Daily Show.’

So topical, sharp-edged observation will rule – but funny, natch.

“With comedy, you can’t start a piece saying, ‘We’re going to make a change happen, we’re going to change the world with this comedy,’ because then nothing would be funny at all,” she said. “But we’re definitely attracted to stories that …. shine a light on something. Somebody should be paying attention to these things.”

Guests, celebrity or otherwise, won’t be on hand in the show’s early going.

“To be perfectly honest, we’re not that interested in pop culture stuff … we’re steeped in it like anybody else, but it’s not our particular interest. We’ll almost certainly have guests at some point but we would like to think we could fold them in organically,” she said, then took a beat and added: “I guess if Tom Cruise calls, you really have to put him on the show.”

Will “Full Frontal” gorge on the presidential election, in grand “Daily Show” tradition?

“We’ll definitely cover it. We’ll go to the conventions. We’ll just have to. It’s going to get pretty crazy out there, and it already is.”

But while it’s an “an interest and a passion,” Bee said, it won’t be the whole show.

Bee and Jones, the parents of three preteen children, are producing both “Full Frontal” and “Detour,” a TBS comedy starring Jones that will debut in April. The sitcom was shot last summer in Atlanta, during the kids’ school break, but “Full Frontal” has to mesh with daily family life.

“Living in New York, we try to keep everything on our side of the island and streamline the process. So when we were looking for a studio space, it was like, ‘Can we just use this one, it’s 20 blocks from my house?’ I can walk to the studio,” Bee said.

Equal division of labor is key.

“My husband’s been really diligent about it. Since I’ve been working on ‘Full Frontal,’ he’s done all the school concerts, all the potlucks. I make breakfasts and lunches in the morning, he does the (school) drop-offs,” Bee said.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $3.75/week.

Subscribe Today